Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 September 1936 — Page 7
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1 \. Monthly meetings are held in the
state president
. town houses and exchanges,
+ Sharpe, * Walter Geisel,
{ rent photoplays.
- ports from all neighborhood motion
presented as well as speakers from
T
Indorsers of’ Photoplays to |
~ Fete Founder |
. Murs. David Ross’ Services | Will Be Recognized During Program. |
——
: i Mrs. David Ross’ long-time serv- | ice to the Indianapolis Indorsers of | Photoplays, which she founded, is| to be recognized at the president's | day program in her honor on Tues- | day at the Claypool. Mrs. Ross has | served as president for nearly all of | the club's 21 years, and has missed | only one meeting. | Mrs, Carl Day is the committee chairman, assisted by Mesdames| James Sproule, Wolf Sussman, J. Heuber, C. J. Finch, general com: | mittee: M=s. E. L. Burnett, tickets; Mrs. L. R. Mottern, reservations; | Mrs. W. D. Keenan ahd Mrs. Finch, /
dining room.
guests are to be | Mrs. R. Earl Peters, Fort Wayne, ;Mrs. Ferd Lucas, |! Greencastle; Mrs. B. J. Roberts and | Mrs. J. R. Blayney, Fort Wayne, also state officers. Other officers with Mrs. Ross include Mrs. Day, and philanthropic chairman; Mrs. Sproule, second vice president and historian; Mrs. Sussman, third vice president; Mrs. Issac -Born, fourth vice president; Mrs. H. W. Southard, yjecording secretary; Mrs. Will Wertz, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Hueber, treasurer; Mrs. Burnett, auditor; Mrs. Julia Belle Tutewiler, parliamentarian; Mrs. Mottern, membership secretary, and Mrs. _ Finch, Mrs. Mottern and Mrs. Casper Kempf, elective board members. A business meeting at 10 a. m. is; fo precede the 12:30 o'lock lunch--eon in the Palm room.
Committees Named
Other special +1
| The officers have appointed their committees and delegates. They are: | Community Fund, Mrs. Hueber, dele- | gate, Mrs. Ross, alternate; Seventh ! District Federation of Clubs, Mrs. | Sussman, delegate, Mrs. Lloyd Fouts, | alternate; Indianapolis Council of | Women, Mrs. Edna Sharpe, dele- | gate, Mrs. R. C. Snoddy, alternate; | Bulletin-News staff advisory committee, Mrs. Ross. Mrs. Hueber and Mrs. Sussman, business manager, Mrs. Burnett and editor, Howard M. Rudeaux; registration and cards, Miss Helen Daily; memorial. Mrs. ‘Kempf; pictures, Mrs. A. P| Ellison with Mrs. Sproule, advisor; downr Mrs. Thomas Demmerly; neighborhood houses, Mrs. F. A. Speak; ways and means, Mrs. R. R. Mills, Mrs. co-chairmen; Mesdames Alpert Off, C.J. Sherman and H. P. Willwerth; telephone, Mrs. Marie Powers, chairman, with Mesdames W. E. King, A. H. Brehauer and Rcbert Drums, assistants: transportation, Mrs. Anna ‘Bertrand; publicity, Mrs. Southard; budget, Mrs. Hueber, Mrs. Sussman | and Mrs. Burnett, and patriotic, |
~ Mrs. Finch.
| Classify "Photoplays
The picture committee is com- | posed of fourteen members who meet on the fourth Tuesday of every month to discuss and classify curMrs. Ellison is
chairman.
Claypool at 10 a. m. on the first esday of every month when re-
picture houses and representatives from affiliated public schools are
the industry and correlated groups.
2 CHURCH GROUPS
RDAY, SEPT. 5, 1936
OLLEGE SET PREPARES FOR DEPARTURE TO CAMPUSES
first vice president |.
SCHEDULE MEETING |
The | Central Christian Church Missionary Society Aid are to meet jointly Thursday. Mrs. H. A. Koss is the society president and Mrs, A. C. Zaring, the aid ‘president.
Luncheon is to be served at 12:30 |
Pp. m. Afterward Mrs. W. A. Shullenberger is to lead devotions and Mrs. Nancy Shelby, chief adult probation officer of the juvenile court, is to talk on the work of the court. Jack Tresler is to present Heeoruion numbers. Mrs.. B. B. Pettijohn is firozram
and Calendar |.
committee chairman, with Mrs. H. H.! Amholter and Mrs. Chantilla White co-chairmen.
TEA IS TO HONOR
MISS FRIEDA KLINK |
Mrs. Dorothy K. Greene, 4624 N. Pennsylvania-st, is to be hostess for a .tea tomorrow afternoon in honor of Miss Frieda Klink, honorary Sigma Alpha Iota member. Miss Klink is on her way to New York to open her studio for voice culture. Mzs, Opal Larsh and Miss Emma ~ Doeppers are to. preside at the tea table. A business meeting of Zeta Chapter of the national music sorority is to be held at 12 Tuesday in the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music recreation room.
COUPLE TO LIVE IN CAPITOL-AV HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Emmett M. Waits are to return from a wedding trip in the East to live at 3131 N. Capi-
. tol-av.. Mrs, Waits before her mar-
riage Aug. 22 at Wilmette Baptist Church; Wilmette, Ill, was Mrs. - Dorothy Richards.
|. PROPYLAEUM CLUB
IS TO PLAY BRIDGE
The Propylaeum Club's September contract bridge and luncheon party is to be Wednesday. Card playing is to begin at 10 a. m. and luncheon 1s to be, served at 1 p. m. Mesdames Edward H. Knight, Edward Lynn and William J. Shafer _ @re on the committee.
INVITES MEMBERS OF ARTEMAS CLUB
Mrs. Prank Freers, Lindbergh ds, is to entertain members of the iow lub at a business : and covered-dish luncheon meeting ®
= y. C.
F. Mesdames B. A. Fohl, I. Stevenson and George Stiles are to 4 the hostess.
Drill Team to Meet Indianapolis
Zouave Drill
Devotes Time to Friends and
Four Principals in Local Wedding and Engagement Announcements
Wardrobes Before Leaving; ‘Be Sure to Write’ Is Byword
Eastern Schools Beckon Many From City;
Large Delegation Goes to Connecticut; Party Planned for Tonight.
BY BEATRICE BURGAN ~ Seciety Editor
HERE'S tim eenough to be concerned about studies, the college set believes. Right now, it’s more to the student's liking to keep busy replenishing wardrobes, seeing friends before they leave and enjoying parting attentions of families and friends. : Miss Katherine Myer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Myer, is Dawes House president on the Smith College campus and she is to return earlier than most students to welcome the residents. Misses Maude and Virginia Balke, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Balke, also are to be at Smith, Miss Betty Tharp, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Tharp, is to begin her senior year and Miss Patricia Jones, . EE daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Clyde Jones, is to return == _ as a junior. j Miss Myer is to motor East with her brothers. :
Walter and Joseph Myers,” who are to re-enter Yale. "| william Koehne, son of Mrs. Louise Schellschmidt ’ Koehne, and Frank Powell also are to be Yale upper- | classmen. A large delegation of girls is bound for Connecticut College for Women. Among them are Miss Mary Stewart Kurtz, daughter of Mrs. Maude R. Kurtz; Misses Joan Metzger, Mary Sheerin Kuhn, Dorothy Barlow, Dorothy Braden, Laura Sheerin and Barbara Haines. Miss Haines, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Morris Haines, is to leave on Sept. 17 for Buffalo, N. Y,, to visit a classmate, Miss Virginia Deuel, before classes open. Entertain Students “Be sure you write” will figure often in the conversations of Miss
Katharine Porter’s guests tonight ; at the Indianapolis Country Club.! Mr. and Mrs. W. Richardson Sine Miss Portor, who is to return to | clair, is to begin her senior year afb Sweet Briar College, is to have Miss | Vassar College. Among her local Ardith Mettenet, Chicago, a former | classmates are to be Misses Bare Tudor Hall classmate; Miss Kurtz, por Hickman, Carolyn Stelck, Har= Miss Jane Zimmer, Foster Clippinger | Jane Holwies, Marynetie Hintt
Jr., Noble Dean Jr., William Piel and Richard McDuffee, all college stu- | Mary Louise Merrell, Helen Taggart
dents, as her guests. Miss Mettenet,| and Mary Alice Buskirk, Blooming= -
Miss Burgan
. Ps
=F
‘PHOTO BY pea
Illinois-st. Past Presidents’ Council, Aux. to
Alpha Theta Chi. |st.
8 p. m. Tues.
St. Philip Neri Auditorium. 8:30 chairman. Lotto, 8:30 p. m. Holler. Cards. Woman's Benefit Association. card party 2:30.
Liederkranz Ladies’ Society. ton-st. Indianapolis Bingo Club. 8:30 p.
chairman.
EVENTS
: PROGRAMS George H. Thomas W. R. C. 2 p. m. Mon. Fort Friendly, 512 N.
Buffet luncheon. Mrs, Claudia Erther, 5307 N. Illinois-st, hostess. SORORITIES ‘Miss Norma Field, 2148 N. OxfordMrs. Howard Newhouse, president; |president; Mrs. George Blose, treasurer, and Miss Fields, secretary.
CARD PARTIES
1:40 Wed. Birthday dinner Hiatt, Mrs. Josephine Corbion, chairmen. 8:15 p. m. Sun. Hall, 1421 E. WashingMrs. Paul Thau. chairman, Mrs. Henry Walters, assistant. Card party, 1:45 p. m. Wed. Foodcraft,
Proceeds for Sunnyside Sanatorium, Mrs,
z
Sons of Union Veterans. Thurs.
Mrs. Ramon LaRue, vice
p. m. Mon. Mrs, James Manley, Wed. Auditorium. Mrs. Edwin
Public Hannah
230: E. Ohio-st.
for members. Mrs.
Fountain Square Hall. C. H. Steinbruegge,
m. today.
Cross-Kimble Vows Tomorrow "ill Be Preceded by Luncheon
A pre-nuptial luncheon at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Kimble |
is to precede the wedding of their daughter, Miss Miriam Kimble, and John J. Cross Jr. at 4 p. m. tomorrow in McKee Chapel, Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. Guests are to include the bridal party and out-of-town ‘guests. Dr. J. Ambrose Dunkel is to officiate at the ceremony. Palms and ferns and 7-branched candelabra are to decorate the altar. Mrs, Frank Billeter is to sing “O Promise Me” and “Because” preceding the ceremony, and Mrs. Donna Eberhard is to play bridal music on the organ. The bride is to enter with her father. Her white chiffon gown is designed with long, full sleeves, a slight train and a shirred neckline with a standup ruffie. Her fingertip length veil is edged in white satin and joins a satin triple braided halo.’ Her bouguet is to be white flowers.
The bride's sister, Miss Janet
Kimble, is to be bridesmaid, wearing" a pink embroidered organdy gown with puff sleeves and tiny buttons trimming the dress from the neckline to the hem. She is to wear gardenjas in her hair,
| Kewanna, Ind. are to assist at the reception. A wedding cake is to be central decoration on ‘the table. Mrsg Kimble is to wear a blue sheer gown with white accessories and a pink rose corsage. Out-of-town guests are to include Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Hinton, Ray Strader, Kewanna; Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Cook and daughter Joan, LaPorte; Albert Hinton, Beverley Shores, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Mead and daughter Jacqueline, Linton, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gabbert, Marion. The couple is to leave on a wedding trip. The bride is to travel in a brown wool ensemble with brown and beige accessories. Mr. Cross and his bride are to live at 3712 Ruckle.
WEDDING DAY SET | BY EVELYN MILLS
Mrs. John Mills announces that the marriage of her daughter, Miss Evelyn Mills, and Theodore Wessel is to take place at 9 a. m, Monday in St. Patrick's Church. Attendants are to be Miss Alberta Mills, sister of the bride-to-be, maid of honor: Leo Phillips, best man;
1 Roger Mills. bro brother of the bride-to-
Frank Wessel, other of to-be, ushers; John
and daughter Martha,
1. Mr. and Mrs. Harry S. Ball, 3537 Winthrop-av, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Agnes Ball, to Erwin A. Schafer. The wedding is to take place Oct. 11 in the Broadway Methodist Church. 2. Mrs. Charles Howland Bond was formerly Miss Alice June Holloway, daughter of Mrs. Alice G. Holloway. Mr. and Mrs. Bond are at home at 4127 Sutherlandav.
“PHOTO, BY PHOTO ~CRAFT
3. The marriage of Miss Katherine McClure, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ‘William T. McClure, to Cecil E. Edwards is to take place Sept. 26. : : 4. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Hicks have announced the ‘engagement of their daughter, Miss Helen Hicks, to Samuel Walker Downing, son of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Downing. The wedding is set for Oct. 17.
Etiquette By PATRICIA
CARVING BEEFSTEAK-—Sepa- | rate the meat by cutting along the | edge of the bone with the thin point of .the knife. Then, beginning with the wide or bone end and following the grain of the meat, divide the steak into sections an inch or more wide. In porterhouse and similar beefsteaks, the tenderloin and the wider sections of the steaks are most tender and have the finest flavor and texture. For this reason steaks of this kind are carved in small sections and a serving of a portion of the finer quality meat with one of less choice is given to each person. ° LEG OF LAMB-—Place the roast on the platter with the small end to the left of the carver and the curved side of the leg uppermost. Hold the meat with the fork firmly in the center muscle. Cut thin slices downward across the grain
point of the knife beneath and cut along the surface of the bone to
| release them.
Wolcott Pastor to Officiate at Cousin’s Wedding
The Rev. Leonard Watson, Wolcott Methodist Church pastor, came here to officiate at the marriage of his cousin, Robert LE. Goodwin, and Miss Lois Hunter at 2:30 p. m. today. The Sereiny = fo lage place at the me e de’s paren Mr. and Mrs. John Hunter. =; The bride is to be given in marriage by her father. Her white satin gown has long sleeves and a tailored collar, and her tulle veil is of fingertip length. ‘Her Jouquet is to be of
of the meat to the bone. Insert the.
P-T.A.to Have Forum Meeting
at State Fair
Mrs. Robert L. Shank, seventh vice president of the Indiana Congress of Parents and Teachers, is to preside at the panel discussion on the P.-T. A. movement at 3:15 p:' m. Wednesday in the Indiana University building at the State Fairground. The hour's program is to be given in the auditorium as an Education Day feature. Mrs. Logan G. Hughes, president, is to appoint other. members to participate in the discussion. The congress’ first board meeting is to be on Sept. 25 at the Severin. Distriet conferences are ‘to begin with the Eleventh District meeting in Marion on Sept. 28. : Mrs. Hughes is to attend all of the 13 meetings. The national board representative is to be Mrs. H. W. Whitten, Carthage, Ill, who has served as district | director, vice president and president of the IIlinois Congress. Mrs. Hughes has appointed Mrs.
Carl Manthei as chairman for the |
local observance of Indiana's first official Parent-Teacher week, beginning Oct. 4. Gov. McNutt proclaimed the observance.
Mrs. Frances Coyle and Miss Katherine Loing are in Cleveland,
where they are attending the Great LADS
Lakes" Exposition. _ SLIPPERS 47: Pair
KINNEY’S SHOE STORE 138 East Washington Street,
SHOE, REPAIRING
ranasinn: RE,
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The Indianapolis Times
Miss Porter's house guest, is study-|ton. Miss Buskirk is a Tudor Hall ing art at the Chicago Institute. graduate and attended Indiana Miss Dora Sinclair, daughter of | University last year.
AK 7% [D
Introducing
The Family Doctor
Giving The Times Readers a Complete Medical Guide
One New Chapter Every Day
EWSPAPER health columns of the past have been conducted on the hit-and-miss principle. One day chicken pox, next day falling hair, next day falling arches.
A year ago, The Times’ medical authority; Dr. Fishbein, started a new idea in health columns, taking one subject at a time and discussing it thoroughly. First came an extended series on diet. Following this a series on child health. Both ideas were instant successes.
Now comes Dr. Fishbein’s newest series, “The Family Doctor.” It really isn’t a series. Each column will stand alone, without reference to the previous day’s or the next day's release. The entire group of columns, however, if saved and collected in book form, will comprise the most complete and up-to-date-medical encyclopedia ever published. In book form, this work might well cost from $10 to $15. Yet newspapers handling the column may give it to their readers, free with the daily paper.
Dr. Morris Fishbein
"THOUSANDS of new health facts are discovered every year. Medical science now makes more progress in a year than in decades of the past century. Keeping up with this advance, even as it relates to the illnesses in the average home, becomes a problem. “The Family Doctor” is the solution of that problem. It is health news and health advice at thes same time.
"VWRITTEN by D Dr. Morris Fishbein, editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association and national spokesman for the medical profession, “The Family Doctor” will be of unquestionable authority. Dr. = Fishbein has written and edited countless magazine grticles and many ; books, and delivered hundreds of lectures en subjects relating to health, His campaign against medical quacks has won wide acclaim. Dr. Fishbein’s name, as author of “The Family Doctor,” assures newspaper readers : of the high ethical standards with which the column will be conducted. :
Look for This Feature Beginning Wednesday on the EDITORIAL Page
